Summer Lovin' Camps play matchmaker to couples now married. JENNIFER FINER STAFF WRITER Above: Maly Schuman: At camp in 1970. Left: Art Schuman in his camp days. Far Left: A more recent snapshot of the Schumans. Bottom: Art and Mary at their wedding. ril heir friends took bets on how long the camp romance would last. The wager was called off on Oct. 16, 1994, the day Margery Siegel and Howard Klausner got married. "No one thought it would last be- cause we met at camp, he was 3 1/2 years older than I was and we were at different schools," Ms. Klausner said. The Klausners are not the only couple who have met at camp. Many camps have indirectly played match- maker to unsuspecting staff who never dreamed they would meet their hus- band or wife during a summer session. "It seems like there are millions of people who met at camp and are now married," said Joan Lipsitz of West Bloomfield. She met her husband Bob during the summer of 1974. "It's a great place for people with similar in- terests to meet in an easygoing and friendly atmosphere. For every 10 camp spouses, there are hundreds of people who ended up as friends. We're still friends with a lot of the people we met there." Mary Schuman met her husband Art at Camp Tamarack in 1970. Today, the couple lives in Ann Arbor. "I have very fond feelings about meeting my husband at camp," Ms. Schuman said. She was an 18-year-old counselor working in Fishman Village and he was 29 and in charge of the Western Trip. Their paths would not have other- wise crossed. She was a college student in Colorado with the summer off, and he had a few extra months between the end of a job in New Jersey and plans to move to Israel. Both decided to work at camp. The first time Ms. Schuman saw him, he had just returned from the Western Trip and was spending the rest of the summer doing maintenance work. He was painting in one of the camp villages when she decided to talk to him. "I had an apple, which we normally SUMMER LOVIN' page 104 103